(330e) Revealing Mechanisms of Pinholin Activation through Thermodynamic Integration and Mutational Analysis
AIChE Annual Meeting
2021
2021 Annual Meeting
Computational Molecular Science and Engineering Forum
Recent Advances in Multiscale Methodologies
Tuesday, November 9, 2021 - 1:32pm to 1:45pm
While the mechanism has been explored thoroughly, the thermodynamic contributions of each amino acid to the activation process are however unknown. Experimentally, many mutations have been characterized in terms of conformational shifts and the tendency of TMD1 to translocate between the membrane and the solvent. Spin label distance measurements from electron paramagnetic resonance have shown that mutations in A17 and S16 amino acids can cause early activation. From these experiments, a general structure emerges, but the exact molecular-level coordinates remain unknown. To generate a more detailed atomistic structure, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been conducted to explore conformational ensembles over timescales up to hundreds of nanoseconds. Molecular models were validated by comparing structure and dynamics to experimental data, showing close agreement between the two. However, the timescales of conformational rearrangement involving the translocation of TMD1 are too long for standard MD simulations to probe. To compensate for slow kinetics, an alternative thermodynamic model has been employed to compare the relative free energies of translocation for various experimentally characterized mutants. Thermodynamic integration in the form of alchemical mutations provides an alternate route to characterize the thermodynamic cycle of pinholin activation. Thus, through complementary experimental and computational mutational analysis, the thermodynamic contributions of specific amino acids to pinholin rearrangement can be probed relatively quickly. Within this thermodynamic integration framework, we have tested the extent to which (a) hydrophobic interactions between TMD1, TMD2, and the membrane and (b) hydrogen bond interactions between TMD1 and TMD2 affect the conformational stability of pinholinâs active and inactive states. We foresee future applications of this methodology to other systems with inconveniently long time scales.